Over the past few years, several municipalities have voted to stop automatic fluoridation of municipal drinking water, as it basically amounts to forced drugging of an entire population against their will. Large cities like Portland and Dallas were among the first to take measures to stop the practice.

Today in 2018, the Fluoride Action Network (FAN) has a federal lawsuit in place against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) demanding a ban on forced water fluoridation nationwide.

The EPA has tried to get this lawsuit dismissed, but so far has failed.

FAN and Other Aligned Plaintiffs Have Won the First Two Rounds Against the EPA

Round One:

The EPA’s legal counsel proposed the usual defense strategy of having the case dismissed in early 2017.

But FAN attorney Michael Connett countered with a 24-page laundry list of scientifically proven health hazards of the chemical used to fluoridate community water supplies with his statement on page four of this court document:

“In a nation besieged by neurological disorders of poorly understood etiology, both in young children and the elderly, minimizing exposures to known neurotoxic substances must be a public health priority.”

And after reviewing Michael Connett’s 24-page legal response to the EPA’s effort to dismiss, Northern California Federal District Court Judge Edward Chen agreed that FAN’s case would proceed and the EPA’s petition to dismiss the case was denied.

Judge Chen based his decision on the merits of Connett’s documented fluoride health hazards and his cited legal statutory precedents.

See: VICTORY: Judge denies EPA’s motion to dismiss TSCA case!

Round Two:

Winning this round turned out to be very important evidence for this case as part of the “preponderance of evidence” rule required by lawsuits. This guiding rule eliminates the need to prove a defendant “guilty beyond a doubt.” So the more scientific evidence the better.

Plaintiffs FAN et al had come across a monumental study that wasn’t part of their initial list of evidence, Prenatal Fluoride Exposure and Cognitive Outcomes in Children at 4 and 6–12 Years of Age in Mexico, aka The Bahash Study, which wasn’t published until September of 2017 in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, months after the court proceeding’s had started.

Immediately after losing their bid to have the case dismissed, the EPA’s legal counsel argued against allowing FAN et al to expand their base of evidence beyond the original administrative record presented at the outset of this trial in early 2017, which would not allow the Mexico study to be included.

This EPA desired restriction was also not allowed by Judge Chen, who wrote:

“The EPA moves for a protective order limiting the scope of review in this litigation to the administrative record, a request that would effectively foreclose Plaintiffs from introducing any evidence in this litigation that was not attached to their administrative petition.

The text of the TSCA [Toxic Substance Control Act] its structure, its purpose, and the legislative history make clear that Congress did not intend to impose such a limitation in judicial review of Section 21 citizen petitions. The Court therefore DENIES the EPA’s motion.” (Court document)

According to FAN, The Importance of the Bahash Study “Cannot Be Overstated”

There have been other studies indicating a strong association between fluoridated water and lower IQ levels but this one was important for the FAN et al lawsuit for three major reasons.

(1) It was the largest and longest fluoride comparison to IQ studies published internationally.

(2) Seven of the nine researchers were from Canadian and USA universities and institutions while two were in Mexico.

(3) The multi-million dollar research was funded by the USA’s own agencies: National Institutes of Health (NIH); National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; EPA.

Yes, the EPA partially funded this research.

Health Impact News reported back in 2013 that some of the EPA’s own scientists started questioning the negative health effects of fluoride. Dr. William Marcus, the chief toxicologist of the EPA’s Office of Drinking Water, was fired for his refusal to be silent about his work on fluoride. (Source.)

The Bahash Study was also the first study that used individual fluoride measurements of both pre-natal mothers and postnatal children. All others simply referred to a fluoridated water supply.

Mexico doesn’t fluoridate their water, but its water tables and aquifers naturally contain high amounts of calcium fluoride, that’s why many in Mexico use services that deliver five-gallon jugs of reverse osmosis purified water. I lived there for a while and most of us “gringos” and many but not all locals used that reasonably priced service.

The almost 300 mothers and children whose hospital medical records were used in this study were from low to moderate incomes in Mexico City. Apparently, most of them simply don’t bother with that purified water service and use tap water for drinking and cooking.

The amounts of fluoride discovered in their urine were comparable to USA mothers and children who consume artificially fluoridated city water, making the researchers’ conclusion appropriate for anywhere water supplies are artificially fluoridated.

The researchers concluded:

“In this study, higher prenatal fluoride exposure, in the general range of exposures reported for other general population samples of pregnant women and nonpregnant adults, was associated with lower scores on tests of cognitive function in the offspring at age 4 and 6–12 y.” (Study text)

See: FAN, Paul Connett React to NIH Fluoride In Utero Study

Our Sodium Fluoridated Water is Worse than Mexico’s Natural High Calcium Fluoride Water

After WWII, some industrial sites, mostly phosphate plants, were polluting the air with fluorine gas emissions, killing nearby crops and livestock while sickening humans.

By 1970, the EPA had begun enforcing liquid “scrubbers” in industrial smokestacks to collect those toxic fluorine gases instead of polluting the air.

Those industries were also not permitted to pour the liquids containing those trapped fluorine gases into waterways or dump them onto landfills and other dumping sites. Properly ridding the area of the collected sludge became expensive.

So those industries, mostly phosphate fertilizer groups, avoided the extra expense of safely getting rid of the toxic sludge, hydrofluorosilicic acid, by selling it to municipalities as a dental health mass medication, (since proven to be worthless for preventing tooth decay while adding to an epidemic of dental fluorosis). Excess fluoride destroys tooth enamel and weakens bones. (Source)

A couple of decades ago, the EPA also banned dumping what is collected from scrubbers and filters into open dumps and waterways. It’s that toxic. In 2000, Dr. J. William Hirzy, Senior Vice President of EPA’s Headquarters Union in Washington D.C., commented:

“If this stuff (fluoride) gets into our air, it’s a pollutant; if it gets into a river, it’s a pollutant; if it gets into a lake, it’s a pollutant; but if it goes right into your drinking water system, that’s not a pollutant. That’s amazing. There’s gotta be a better way to manage this stuff.” (Source)

Call to Action

FAN is moving beyond its one by one successes of reversing water fluoridation in local USA communities and other nations by using the Federal Court System to make the EPA ban water fluoridation nationally.

In addition to FAN, several other groups and individuals are registered as plaintiffs in this suit. They are:

The plaintiff’s are not seeking financial damages. They are seeking remuneration from the EPA for legal expenses in addition to the Federal Court’s decision that will force the EPA to ban water fluoridation completely if FAN et al win.

It’s a long and expensive haul through the courts, but these two victories are promising omens of an eventual final victory that may result in no more fluoridated water on a national level.

FAN is seeking donations for the legal expenses that include bringing expert witnesses to testify on water fluoridation and its health hazards.

Learn more about Flouride Action Network (FAN) and its grassroots reach, its members, and its successes at Fluoride Alert.